Texas Beyond History

Plateaus and Canyonlands

Teaching Resources

Welcome, Teachers, to the exciting world of Prehistoric Texas! The lessons
below will introduce your students to the remarkable native peoples who lived
in the Plateaus and Canyonlands region of Texas for more than 13,500 years!
Each lesson, based on colorful exhibits about ancient places in the state,
is correlated to TEKS objectives and offers mutli-disciplinary learning opportunities
in social studies, geography, science, and art.

What's Cookin' at Honey Creek?introduces students to the fascinating
process in which prehistoric "chefs" on the Edwards Plateau cooked quantities
of plant bulbs in earth ovens by using hot rocks. This cooking technique was
used for more more than 8,000 years in Texas, so they clearly had a recipe
for success! View
TEKS and download page.

Kincaid Creatures
This two-part lesson illustrates how archeologists use stratigraphy (layering of the earth) to help determine which animals lived (or were hunted) at the Kincaid Shelter over the last 13,000 years and how some of these animals may have become extinct. Students work with a partner to answer stratigraphy diagram questions, then search the Kincaid Shelter website to identify animals whose remains were found in different layers of Kincaid. The animals’ names are then used to solve a “Magic Squares” puzzle. View
TEKS and download page.

Comparing Two Cultures: Hinds Cave and YoursIn this lesson students compare their own culture with that of prehistoric
people who camped at Hinds Cave in the Lower Pecos region of Texas thousands
of years ago. Students become familiar with lesson-related vocabulary terms (in
English and Spanish), locate Hinds Cave on a map, make cultural comparisons
using a graphic organizer, and write a comparison/contrast essay on the two cultures.
(7th-grade and older) View
TEKS and download page.

Digging
Deeper: Mission San Sabá is a lesson is aimed
at students who already have an understanding of the Spanish mission-presidio
system in Texas. The purpose of this lesson is to have students understand Spanish
motives for establishing Mission San Sabá and the reasons
for the mission’s failure. View
TEKS and download page.

The Graham-Applegate Rancheria
In this lesson, students can learn about the Indian groups who lived
1,000 years ago on the Llano River. The students will use paintings and photographs of tools and other artifacts to make inferences and conclusions about how the Indians lived. View
TEKS and download page.